Top News
U.S. not renewing trade agreement with Canada and Mexico

U.S. not renewing trade agreement with Canada and Mexico

The United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer says the U.S. is not renewing the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement "in its current form" — but the trade agreement will remain in place as negotiations continue. "The United States will continue to engage with Mexico and Canada to address the Agreement’s shortcomings and our trade deficits with these countries," Greer said in a statement...

Build Canada’s AI ‘experiment’ reignites debate over political communication ethics

Build Canada’s AI ‘experiment’ reignites debate over political communication ethics

As AI-generated content becomes cheaper and more realistic, strategists warn disclosure requirements alone won't preserve public trust. As the third-party advocacy group Build Canada becomes the second politically adjacent organization in as many weeks to publicly experiment with artificial intelligence-generated communications, technology experts and digital strategists say the technology’s rapid evolution demands stronger ethical standards as legislation alone is unlikely...

'Canada gave us a free bridge': California Congressman adds voice to open the Gordie Howe bridge chorus

'Canada gave us a free bridge': California Congressman adds voice to open the Gordie Howe bridge chorus

The issue of the finished-but-not-yet-opened Gordie Howe International Bridge continues to create ripples on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border, and far from the Michigan-Ontario crossing that is its epicentre. Among the more recent statements comes from Mike Levin, the Democratic incumbent from California’s 49th congressional district, serving in the U.S. House of Representatives since 2019.

New Tory finance critic maintains Canada is in recession after front bench shakeup

New Tory finance critic maintains Canada is in recession after front bench shakeup

The Conservatives have named a new critic to take on the Liberals' handling of the economy — but not a new strategy, as party stalwart Michael Chong maintained Tuesday the country is in a recession despite data suggesting the economy started growing again. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has named Chong, an Ontario MP, as the new finance critic in a...

Poll: Canadian patriotism was fading. Then Trump came back.

Poll: Canadian patriotism was fading. Then Trump came back.

As they celebrate their national day, Canadians feel a renewed sense of national pride — a reversal of a stubborn trend that dates back at least 40 years. All it took was an unpredictable and aggressive next-door neighbor whose sovereignty threats and trade war left a lasting mark.

Polls

Section Sponsor

This section is sponsored by Canada's mining companies.
Liberals lead by 13 points - Carney ahead of Poilievre by 26 points on preferred PM.

Liberals lead by 13 points - Carney ahead of Poilievre by 26 points on preferred PM.

Canada’s federal political landscape remains steady, with little movement in party support. The Liberals continue to lead comfortably at 43.8%, ahead of the Conservatives at 30.4%. The NDP sits at 12.0%, while the Bloc (6.5%) and Greens (5.2%) remain smaller players.

Canada Day Survey: 80% Proud to Be Canadian, But Many Are Worried

Canada Day Survey: 80% Proud to Be Canadian, But Many Are Worried

A new Canada Day survey from Liaison Strategies finds Canadians remain proud of their country, but that pride is mixed with anxiety about the country's direction. Thinking about Canada Day this year, 51% of Canadians say they are very proud to be Canadian, while 29% say they are somewhat proud. Nine per cent say they are not very proud, 6%...



Opinion

More
Who does Mark Carney think we are, anyway?

Who does Mark Carney think we are, anyway?

The Prime Minister has been telling a gleaming story about Canada, but is avoiding the dark clouds gathering ahead

Mark Carney and Donald Trump offer revealing birthday gifts to their countries

Mark Carney and Donald Trump offer revealing birthday gifts to their countries

Mark Carney’s newest video, released just in time for Canada Day, is a sober affair, giving the nation some hard truths as a 159th birthday present. The climate plans of Justin Trudeau’s years have to be ratcheted back; the world is a dangerous place and trust is a rarer commodity in that world than oil.

News

More
‘Unshakeable foundation’: Carney celebrates unity in Canada Day address

‘Unshakeable foundation’: Carney celebrates unity in Canada Day address

In his yearly Canada Day message, Prime Minister Mark Carney spoke on unity, kindness and strength, as his government continues to face challenges to Canada’s sovereignty, both from within the country, and outside of it. In the two-and-a-half-minute address, Carney celebrated the beauty and diversity of the country’s landscape and people. He stressed that in 1867, when four colonies became...

Canada will enter the 2027 Eurovision Song Contest

Canada will enter the 2027 Eurovision Song Contest

Today is the day fans of over-the-top talent shows and campy musical performances have been waiting for: Canada is entering the 2027 Eurovision Song Contest. The announcement was made by CBC/Radio-Canada and the European Broadcasting Union less than a week after confirming CBC had become a full member of the EBU. "On this Canada Day, as we celebrate with Canadians...



Opinion (Continued) More

Budget? What budget? Mark Carney’s novel solution for repairing 24 Sussex Drive

Budget? What budget? Mark Carney’s novel solution for repairing 24 Sussex Drive

How far will Canada’s prime ministers go to avoid headlines with a multimillion-dollar figure attached to the words “24 Sussex Drive”? Embarrassingly far.

Mark Carney has talked about ‘Canada Strong.’ But this is how we’ll actually figure out what it means to be Canadian

Mark Carney has talked about ‘Canada Strong.’ But this is how we’ll actually figure out what it means to be Canadian

It’s been nearly 160 years, and we’ve yet to fully figure out what it means to be Canadian. Just flip back through the archives of this paper and you’ll find a history of hand-wringing about that fact. The constant pull from south of the border, a Star editorial argued in 1976, “requires an answer to reinforce Canada’s will for cultural...

Why Canada Day is my favourite holiday

Why Canada Day is my favourite holiday

Canada Day is my favourite holiday of the year. I’m serious. Ask my wife. We’ve debated Christmas versus Canada Day many times and I’m holding firm. It isn’t because I was minister of Canadian Heritage at one point and it seems obligatory or because I’m a sappy nationalist. It is because I genuinely love Canada and I love that we...

Le Canada, mon pays

Le Canada, mon pays

In my column last week, I focused on why I love Quebec, as well as assessing some of its flaws. I quoted former Quebec premier Jean Lesage, who described his attachment to his homeland and his country as “Le Québec, ma patrie—le Canada, mon pays.” This week, for Canada Day, I thought I would articulate the strengths and weaknesses of...

The Conservatives’ critic shuffle is a sign of maturity

The Conservatives’ critic shuffle is a sign of maturity

Shuffles of the opposition front bench – the roster of critics, or as the Conservatives prefer, shadow ministers, assigned to dog the government ministers for their respective portfolios – rarely excite much notice. That has been especially true of the Conservatives under Pierre Poilievre: partly because there are so many critics (83, in the current incarnation, including shadow associate ministers...

Avi Lewis and the dark path of the far left

Avi Lewis and the dark path of the far left

Is Canada ready to surf a socialist wave? After the shock victories of three hard-left candidates in last week’s U.S. Democratic primaries, voters and their leaders may wonder whether our country could elect the likes of “democratic socialists” Darializa Avila Chevalier, Brad Lander and Claire Valdez. Chevalier is particularly radical: in a since-deleted X post she wrote “I forgot to...



Will this be Carney's summer of love for major projects?

Will this be Carney's summer of love for major projects?

It should come as no surprise that Canada's prime minister would go to bat for national unity, but it remains unclear exactly how Mark Carney's determination will manifest itself in Alberta. At his end-of-sitting news conference last week, Carney vowed to make the case for Canada and use the summer months to convince Albertans that things are improving, and that...

Mark Carney’s Canada Day Speech: No Pressure, Prime Minister

Mark Carney’s Canada Day Speech: No Pressure, Prime Minister

As many Canadians brace for a Canada Day heat wave, we have good news and bad news for you to ponder while you’re raiding the icepack, AC, and oscillating-fan sections at Canadian Tire. The good news is that Canada’s “technical recession” of a month ago is now, per BMO Chef Economist and Policy Contributing Writer Doug Porter, a technical recovery...

Shifting stories and questionable connections call for a probe of Carney’s condo bailout

Shifting stories and questionable connections call for a probe of Carney’s condo bailout

In the 2015 British election, the Labour party campaign team underlined their commitment to keeping their promises by literally carving them in stone. Article content When the leader, the hapless Ed Miliband, showed up to unveil the eight-foot-tall limestone slab, he turned to his spin doctor and said: “Bob, doesn’t it look a bit like a gravestone?”

We’re stepping up, we’re doing the thing, let’s do all the things

We’re stepping up, we’re doing the thing, let’s do all the things

Canada is buying a sophisticated radar system from our friends in Australia … at a speed not seen in generations, and all that jazz. First, the news: Canada will spend $2.6-billion to procure an “over-the-horizon” radar system that will (hopefully!) allow anything approaching North America from the North—aircraft, missile, or drone—to be tracked at long ranges. The Australian system is...

The big-tech backlash is coming. Canada's leaders aren't ready for it

The big-tech backlash is coming. Canada's leaders aren't ready for it

As a headline writer, you’re essentially in the business of getting people’s attention. The team at the Globe and Mail certainly hit that mark with a recent column titled “SpaceX IPO makes Elon Musk the first trillionaire. Here’s how to properly hate him.” This spurred all sorts of noisy pushback from Canada’s tech elite, with Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke suggesting...

Separation Summer? Carney’s Real Test May be FDI Fall

Separation Summer? Carney’s Real Test May be FDI Fall

As we approach the Canada Day launch of summer, much of the attention on Prime Minister Mark Carney and the challenges facing his government is focused on the fate of the CUSMA trade deal and Alberta’s future. But there is another event on the horizon that could both deliver disproportionate impact on these ongoing policy and political files and provide...



The Gordie Howe bridge is still closed and Trump won’t open it. What that says about “Fortress North America”

The Gordie Howe bridge is still closed and Trump won’t open it. What that says about “Fortress North America”

Donald Trump has made the Gordie Howe International Bridge into a big, beautiful monument to the futility of trying to jointly advance the economic interests of his country and ours. There are so many reasons for Canadians to be furious about Trump blocking the bridge’s opening: the pain to industries that need a faster crossing at the Windsor-Detroit border, the...

Finally, someone makes a decision about 24 Sussex

Finally, someone makes a decision about 24 Sussex

For more than a decade, a gray limestone-clad house overlooking the Ottawa River has served as a symbol of Canadian indecision and entropy. The prime minister’s official residence at 24 Sussex Drive had been left to the gnawing of rats because politicians didn’t have the guts to do something about it. Anything.

Are renovations of 24 Sussex overdue or over the top?

Are renovations of 24 Sussex overdue or over the top?

On Friday Prime Minister Mark Carney announced a national fundraising campaign for the renovation of the prime minister's official residence, 24 Sussex Drive. But is this project long overdue or just another opportunity for political posturing? Political insiders Greg MacEachern, Fred DeLorey and Anne McGrath speak to Power & Politics. The Political Pulse Panel also weighs in on the prime...

Mark Carney lays groundwork for restoring relations with Iran

Mark Carney lays groundwork for restoring relations with Iran

The fact the Prime Minister personally favours re-opening the Canadian embassy in Tehran was made crystal clear at a press conference last week

The Carney government's Canada Day conundrums

The Carney government's Canada Day conundrums

Prime Minister Mark Carney spoke at Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto several weeks ago and denounced antisemitism and stated that, “Unity is not uniformity … our differences are strengths to be nurtured, not risks to be managed.” All Canadians of at least the age of seven have heard similar remarks by public figures, but they do not address the requirement...

Quebec’s Hot Political Summer

Quebec’s Hot Political Summer

With Quebec’s fête nationale of Saint-Jean-Baptiste having launched the province’s pre-election political summer on June 24th, the phoney-war phase of mudslinging and burger flipping ahead of an October 5th election is now underway.



To govern is to straddle: How is Mark Carney going to manage simultaneous, competing priorities?

To govern is to straddle: How is Mark Carney going to manage simultaneous, competing priorities?

To govern is to choose, the old adage runs. The old adage is wrong. More often, to govern is to straddle. Politicians are disinclined to choose by nature, of course: left unsupervised, they will nearly always prefer guns and butter to guns or butter. But many of the most important issues do not lend themselves to binary, either-or choices. The...

Mark Carney’s Canada pitch to Alberta: Don’t mess it up

Mark Carney’s Canada pitch to Alberta: Don’t mess it up

Every good political campaign needs a slogan. Mark Carney may have handed one to the team that will be fighting for Alberta to resist the separatist option this October: “Canada: don’t mess it up.” In a wide-ranging news conference on Thursday, Carney was focused on looking back over his achievements of the past year, but the questions from journalists, naturally...

High stakes and co-operation: Carney’s Alberta referendum message

High stakes and co-operation: Carney’s Alberta referendum message

Canada’s worth fighting for. Alberta does better together with the rest of Canada. And the Oct. 19 referendum in the province is a real choice that could bring on years of uncertainty for Alberta’s economy. None of those points, raised by Prime Minister Mark Carney at a press conference on Thursday, are groundbreaking. But together, the three parts are the...

Trump can choose to wreck the U.S. economy — but he won’t stop there

Trump can choose to wreck the U.S. economy — but he won’t stop there

What’s worse: That Donald Trump wants to break off trade with Canada, or that the U.S. president doesn’t want us to trade with anybody else? Never before as a country have we been so outraged into collective retaliation as we have by America’s rejection of us, its closest trading partner. But whatever we may think of America’s political trajectory, the...

Here’s what’s wrong with Carney’s ‘Canada Strong’

Here’s what’s wrong with Carney’s ‘Canada Strong’

Thanks to the Canada Strong Pass, Canadians can enjoy a more affordable summer. Valid from June 19 to Sept. 7, it provides free admission to all national historic sites and parks operated by Parks Canada, free or reduced admission at national and provincial museums and galleries and free and discounted travel with Via Rail.

Carney shifts to damage control on his condo developer bailout

Carney shifts to damage control on his condo developer bailout

Nobody could accuse Mark Carney of lacking intellectual suppleness. A week after enthusiastically endorsing the federal government’s involvement in moves to buy and convert up to 2,500 Vancouver condos that developers can’t unload, on Thursday the prime minister downplayed Ottawa’s role in the scheme. Article content At a press conference to mark the end of the parliamentary session, Carney said...

News (Continued) More

Old emission plan would have been ‘opportunity’ to ‘pull Canada apart’: Carney

Old emission plan would have been ‘opportunity’ to ‘pull Canada apart’: Carney

As Prime Minister Mark Carney attempts to make Canada an energy superpower, he is conceding for the first time that the country’s greenhouse gas emissions will be “higher in the next few years” than projected under the previous government’s plan. The admission came in his second “Forward Guidance” video address to Canadians released on Tuesday. “In my judgement, that plan...

Regulator launches inquiry into contentious fees charged by Rogers, Bell and Telus

Regulator launches inquiry into contentious fees charged by Rogers, Bell and Telus

Canada's telecom regulator has launched a formal inquiry into wireless fees charged by Rogers Communications, Bell Canada and Telus Communications, claiming the charges appear to violate new consumer protection rules. In a public notice posted Tuesday, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) ordered Canada's three largest telecom companies to justify their contentious fees and explain why they shouldn't face...

Guilbeault says Canada 'backsliding' on climate action as he resigns as MP

Guilbeault says Canada 'backsliding' on climate action as he resigns as MP

Former environment minister reveals to CBC News why he is leaving politics. Ex-environment minister Steven Guilbeault says Canada is 'backsliding' on climate action as he announced Wednesday that he is leaving his job as an MP. In a candid interview with CBC's Power and Politics, Guilbeault elaborated on why he decided to leave, how the Alberta energy deal impacted his...

Feds losing leverage by ‘bypassing’ key step to expedite submarine purchase, say former senior public servants

Feds losing leverage by ‘bypassing’ key step to expedite submarine purchase, say former senior public servants

Not using the request for proposal process creates the 'risk it will be almost like a sole source situation,' says Clem Srour. But the Defence Investment Agency says the alternate proposal preparation instructions 'function similarly.'

'Part of the solution is time': How the new Conservative finance critic thinks the party can regain ground

'Part of the solution is time': How the new Conservative finance critic thinks the party can regain ground

Poilievre's office on Tuesday announced his 'affordability team,' which saw key members of his caucus switch titles

Foreign investors buy record amounts of Canadian government debt, lowering Carney’s borrowing costs

Foreign investors buy record amounts of Canadian government debt, lowering Carney’s borrowing costs

Foreign investors including pension funds, insurance companies and hedge funds are buying Canada’s federal bonds in record amounts, easing the cost of funding Prime Minister Mark Carney’s expensive nation-building projects but potentially introducing more volatility to Canada’s debt market.

‘Not looking for my pen’: Carney not expecting resolution or ‘any drama’ on CUSMA deadline

‘Not looking for my pen’: Carney not expecting resolution or ‘any drama’ on CUSMA deadline

Prime Minister Mark Carney says he doesn’t expect any resolution Wednesday to the ongoing talks about whether to renew or review the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement. “We’re expecting a constructive exchange,” Carney told reporters in Kuujjuaq, Que. on Tuesday ahead of an Inuit–Crown Partnership Committee meeting. “I wouldn’t expect any drama tomorrow. I’m not looking for my pen.”...

Carney to travel to Turkey for NATO summit next week, then Saudi Arabia

Carney to travel to Turkey for NATO summit next week, then Saudi Arabia

Prime Minister Mark Carney will attend the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey next week before he jets off to Saudi Arabia -- his first official visits to those countries. NATO members are expected to gather on July 7 and 8 in Ankara to celebrate an alliance-wide increase in defence spending, following years of U.S. pressure for alliance members to hike...

Poilievre shuffles critic roles in Conservative caucus, moves Chong to finance

Poilievre shuffles critic roles in Conservative caucus, moves Chong to finance

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has shuffled his front bench lineup and has named Ontario MP Michael Chong as the party's new finance critic. Chong, a veteran MP who served as the Conservative foreign affairs critic for the last six years, replaces Alberta MP Jasraj Hallan in finance. Hallan moves to the national revenue file. B.C. MP Aaron Gunn is taking...

Solid April GDP rebound suggests Canada is not in a recession: economists

Solid April GDP rebound suggests Canada is not in a recession: economists

The Canadian economy was back in growth mode to start the second quarter, rebounding from a mild contraction in the first three months of 2026. Statistics Canada said Tuesday that real gross domestic product rose 0.5 per cent in April, the fastest growth rate for the economy since July 2025. The result topped StatCan's early estimate for 0.4 per cent...

Alberta will make initial West Coast oil pipeline proposal without private backing, sources say

Alberta will make initial West Coast oil pipeline proposal without private backing, sources say

Alberta’s initial proposal for a new oil pipeline to the West Coast, which it is due to submit to Ottawa’s Major Projects Office this week, will not be backed by any private-sector proponents, two sources say. The province set itself a July 1 deadline to submit the proposal for fast-tracked federal consideration, against opposition from some British Columbia First Nations...

Russian group hacked Quebec water treatment plant, gained access to control pumps and chlorine dosing: CSE

Russian group hacked Quebec water treatment plant, gained access to control pumps and chlorine dosing: CSE

Russian cybercriminals managed to hack into a Quebec municipality's water treatment plant systems and had the ability to wreak havoc on the crucial infrastructure before getting caught, according to Canada's cyber spy agency. In its latest annual report released Monday, the Communications Security Establishment (CSE) said that it detected over 3,200 cyber incidents affecting either federal government organizations or one...

Carney, Inuit leaders meet in Kuujjuaq today for Inuit-to-Crown partnership committee

Carney, Inuit leaders meet in Kuujjuaq today for Inuit-to-Crown partnership committee

Prime Minister Mark Carney will be in Nunavik today to meet with Inuit leaders along with half a dozen of his cabinet ministers, including those who handle the energy, public safety and defence files. The Inuit-to-Crown partnership committee brings together federal cabinet ministers and Inuit three times a year, with the prime minister attending one of those meetings. This meeting...

Dominion Dynamics closes $139M funding round with Canadian defence firms in spotlight

Dominion Dynamics closes $139M funding round with Canadian defence firms in spotlight

A defence technology company that has helped protect Canada's north revealed Tuesday that it recently added another asset to its arsenal: $139 million. Dominion Dynamics claims the cash it raised forms the largest Series A funding round for a Canadian defence company ever and will help the burgeoning Ottawa-based firm expand rapidly. "It feels good ... but funding doesn't mean...

Continental trade pact set to stay in place as U.S. blows past key deadline

Continental trade pact set to stay in place as U.S. blows past key deadline

A key date for a critical trade agreement will come and go this week as the United States under President Donald Trump continues to push for concessions from its closest neighbours. The United States is set to officially inform Canada and Mexico on Wednesday its intentions for the continental trade agreement, known in Canada as CUSMA -- and all signs...

‘Once in a lifetime opportunity’ for Canada to be energy superpower: head of IEA

‘Once in a lifetime opportunity’ for Canada to be energy superpower: head of IEA

The Head of the International Energy Agency said the current geopolitical moment presents a “once in a lifetime opportunity” for Canada to be a “real energy export superpower,” but it needs to move quickly. In a fireside conversation with finance minister François-Philippe Champagne on Monday, Fatih Birol said trust and predictability should be at the centre of Canada’s export strategy...

Trump's threats keep trillion-dollar trade deal in purgatory

Trump's threats keep trillion-dollar trade deal in purgatory

President Donald Trump keeps saying he wants to walk away from the $1 trillion-plus North American trade deal he negotiated in his first term. Nobody believes he will.

Poilievre shuffling his front bench, placing MP Michael Chong in key finance role

Poilievre shuffling his front bench, placing MP Michael Chong in key finance role

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is shuffling his front bench in a reset that includes putting one of his party’s longest-serving MPs into the key position of finance critic. Michael Chong, who has been the MP for the Ontario riding of Wellington-Halton Hills North since 2004, will move to finance after serving as the party’s foreign-affairs critic for nearly six years...

Alberta to announce next steps for pipeline proposal on Thursday

Alberta to announce next steps for pipeline proposal on Thursday

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is expected to announce the next steps in her push for a new oil pipeline to Canada’s West coast on Thursday. As part of the energy memorandum of understanding (MOU) signed between Alberta and the federal government late last year, the province had until July 1 to submit its proposal for a new pipeline to the...

Poilievre set to shuffle Conservative Opposition critics: sources

Poilievre set to shuffle Conservative Opposition critics: sources

Party sources say MPs elected in 2025 are expected to be featured in the shakeup. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is set to announce a shuffling of his critic roles and front bench, according to Conservative sources, as he looks to adapt his messaging to Prime Minister Mark Carney's majority government. The shuffle comes almost three months after Opposition MPs with...

More than $100K raised for 24 Sussex restoration: Rideau Hall Foundation

More than $100K raised for 24 Sussex restoration: Rideau Hall Foundation

The foundation in charge of the fundraiser to restore 24 Sussex says it has received more than $100,000 in donations since Prime Minister Mark Carney announced plans to renovate the heritage residence. Rideau Hall Foundation CEO Teresa Marques says in an emailed statement the group is "humbled and moved" by an influx of donations by individual Canadians over the weekend...

Doug Ford signs U.S. deals amid Donald Trump’s trade uncertainty

Doug Ford signs U.S. deals amid Donald Trump’s trade uncertainty

Paradoxically, history suggests things go best politically for Premier Doug Ford when things are at their most uncertain for Ontario. Ford’s performance during the first years of the COVID-19 pandemic — when Ontario recorded fewer deaths per capita than neighbouring Quebec, Manitoba, New York and Michigan — ensured his Progressive Conservatives were easily re-elected in 2022.

Miller calls for rights museum to change wording in Palestinian displacement exhibit

Miller calls for rights museum to change wording in Palestinian displacement exhibit

Heritage Minister Marc Miller said Monday the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg made "an error" in its presentation of an exhibit about displaced Palestinians.

Israel withdrawing defence attaché from embassy in Canada

Israel withdrawing defence attaché from embassy in Canada

Israel’s defence attaché is departing for home and will not be replaced at the country’s embassy in Canada – a sign, experts say, of an erosion of bilateral relations with Ottawa as ties remain strained over Gaza. Colonel Ilan Or is returning to Israel at the end of July, the embassy said. The responsibilities will be taken over by a...

Canada's former trade chief expects no tariff deal before U.S. midterms

Canada's former trade chief expects no tariff deal before U.S. midterms

Canada's former chief trade negotiator says he doesn't expect Ottawa to reach a tariff deal with Washington before the U.S. midterm elections. Steve Verheul says while there could be a window ahead of the midterms this fall when the U.S. administration is looking for a win, he thinks it's more likely that negotiations stretch into next year. He says he...

Tom Siddon, cabinet minister during Oka crisis, dies at 84: family

Tom Siddon, cabinet minister during Oka crisis, dies at 84: family

Tom Siddon, who served as a cabinet minister under Prime Minister Brian Mulroney during the Oka crisis and later helped to establish Nunavut, has died. He was 84.

Alberta separatists gain partial court win, referendum petition to be verified

Alberta separatists gain partial court win, referendum petition to be verified

A group pushing for a separation referendum in Alberta has won a partial victory in court. An Alberta Court of Appeal judge ruled on Monday that the signatures on their referendum petition can be counted and verified. Justice Alice Woolley, in a written decision, said not verifying the signatures now could create more problems later on should things change with...

Ottawa relaunches federal green home retrofit program in 4 provinces

Ottawa relaunches federal green home retrofit program in 4 provinces

After a hiatus, the popular greener homes program is returning to Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Quebec and British Columbia. Environment, Climate Change and Nature Minister Julie Dabrusin and Energy Minister Tim Hodgson announced on Monday morning the federal program’s relaunch in the four provinces.

‘I think it’s up to you’: Hunter Biden on whether Canada-U.S. relationship tension is permanent

‘I think it’s up to you’: Hunter Biden on whether Canada-U.S. relationship tension is permanent

Hunter Biden says the ball is in Canada’s court when it comes to the state of the country’s relationship with the United States going forward. Former U.S. president Joe Biden’s son is back in the spotlight, but this time, for his sometimes-brutal honesty and no-holds-barred social media presence, including social media posts about Canada.

Canada’s electronic spy agency conducted cyberattacks on criminals brokering fentanyl ingredients, report says

Canada’s electronic spy agency conducted cyberattacks on criminals brokering fentanyl ingredients, report says

Canada’s electronic eavesdropping agency conducted cyberattacks to disrupt the activities of online foreign criminals who were brokering the purchase and sale of precursor chemicals used to make the opioid fentanyl, according to its latest annual report.



US Poli

More
Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship, rejecting Trump's restrictions

Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship, rejecting Trump's restrictions

The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld a broad conception of birthright citizenship, rejecting President Donald Trump's executive order declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily are not American citizens.

Supreme Court upholds trans athlete bans

Supreme Court upholds trans athlete bans

The Supreme Court on Tuesday will rule on the constitutionality of President Donald Trump's order on birthright citizenship declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily are not American citizens.

Supreme Court rules states can count late-arriving mailed ballots, rejecting Trump-led challenge

Supreme Court rules states can count late-arriving mailed ballots, rejecting Trump-led challenge

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court on Monday ruled that states can count ballots that arrive after Election Day, a persistent target of President Donald Trump.

Kara Swisher took Silicon Valley by force. Now she's eyeing influence in the 2028 campaign

International

More
Israel withdrawing defence attaché from embassy in Canada

Israel withdrawing defence attaché from embassy in Canada

Israel’s defence attaché is departing for home and will not be replaced at the country’s embassy in Canada – a sign, experts say, of an erosion of bilateral relations with Ottawa as ties remain strained over Gaza. Colonel Ilan Or is returning to Israel at the end of July, the embassy said. The responsibilities will be taken over by a...

Canada has no plans to open embassies in Iran or Venezuela, Anand says

Canada has no plans to open embassies in Iran or Venezuela, Anand says

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says Canada has no current plans to open embassies in Iran or Venezuela. Anand says Canada relies on Italy to connect with Canadians in Iran but admits using an intermediary isn't the most efficient way of dealing with consular issues. Her comments come after a group called the Iranian Justice Collective said it had heard...

Situation in Venezuela after earthquakes 'horrific': Anand

Situation in Venezuela after earthquakes 'horrific': Anand

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says the situation in Venezuela following two catastrophic earthquakes is "horrific" and Canada will look to expand its humanitarian support for the region. The rare double earthquakes struck northern Venezuela 39 seconds apart on Wednesday, and officials reported Friday the death toll had risen to 920, with more than 3,360 people injured.

Anand welcomes Turkish counterpart to Ottawa ahead of NATO summit in Ankara

Anand welcomes Turkish counterpart to Ottawa ahead of NATO summit in Ankara

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is meeting with her Turkish counterpart in Ottawa today, ahead of the NATO summit next month in Turkey's capital Ankara. Turkish Foreign Affairs Minister Hakan Fidan is visiting Toronto and Ottawa after pitching a strategic partnership with Canada. Turkey is Canada's military ally by virtue of its NATO membership and Fidan has echoed the Canadian...

Carney says having no embassy in Iran puts Canada at 'a disadvantage'

Carney says having no embassy in Iran puts Canada at 'a disadvantage'

As an Iranian diaspora group warns Canada could be looking to re-establish relations with Tehran, Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada is "at a disadvantage" in countries like Iran where it lacks a diplomatic presence. Commenting today on the deadly earthquakes in Venezuela, the prime minister said that not having diplomatic relations with Venezuela's government makes it hard to respond...

Think Tank

More
Explainer: The Risks and Rewards of BYD’s EV Investment in Canada

Explainer: The Risks and Rewards of BYD’s EV Investment in Canada

China’s BYD has emerged as one of the most consequential companies in the global automotive transition. Once known primarily as a battery producer, it is now the world’s largest seller of battery-electric vehicles and a major producer of plug-in hybrids, batteries, and energy-storage systems. BYD’s combination of low-cost vehicles, technological innovation, and control over much of its supply chain has...

Cracks in the ice: Power, propaganda, and Russia’s nuclear icebreakers

Cracks in the ice: Power, propaganda, and Russia’s nuclear icebreakers

For Canada and its allies and partners, the main response to Russian claims of Arctic dominance is to see through their own icebreaker and Arctic economic development plans.


Substacks

More

A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Sage Roundtable: Canada’s Welfare State Was Built for a World That No Longer Exists. Boomers Got the Deal — Will Anyone Else?

Sage Roundtable: Canada’s Welfare State Was Built for a World That No Longer Exists. Boomers Got the Deal — Will Anyone Else?

Today’s Roundtable discussion began with an email from former Bank of Canada governor and deputy minister of finance David Dodge to fellow Sage contributors. David posed this question and observation: “Can Canada still afford the welfare state we built in the 1960s when domestic productivity, labour force growth and investment were high and the global economic conditions were favourable? In...

Pierre Poilievre's move on 24 Sussex

Pierre Poilievre's move on 24 Sussex

I once had a very wealthy colleague who owned an Aston Martin. That’s the four-hundred-thousand-dollar car best known as James Bond’s car. He proudly drove it everywhere. But on weekdays, he drove a Toyota Camry. That more modest vehicle, he explained, was for the office. He didn’t want clients pulling into the visitors’ lot beside an Aston Martin they were...

Indigenous groups call for community awards in Order of Canada

Indigenous groups call for community awards in Order of Canada

A project to ensure Order of Canada recipients better reflect Canada’s diversity appears to have hit a cultural barrier that could limit Indigenous participation.

Podcasts

Section Sponsor

Carney makes the easy call to fix our most symbolic national disgrace

Carney makes the easy call to fix our most symbolic national disgrace

In today’s episode of The Line Podcast, recorded on June 26th, 2026, Matt Gurney and Jen Gerson begin with a rare moment of joy. After decades of delay and political paralysis, there is finally a plan to deal with 24 Sussex Drive. Your hosts don’t love every aspect of it, but they’re so relieved that someone has finally decided to...

"Buy-a-brick": Carney's plan to renovate 24 Sussex

"Buy-a-brick": Carney's plan to renovate 24 Sussex

Crumbling. Rat infested. Decrepit. Unsafe for human habitation. Perhaps not the words you would want to describe the official residence of Canada's leader-- but 24 Sussex Drive has been called it all. In fact, no Prime Minister has lived in the more than a century old mansion for a decade, after Justin Trudeau moved into Rideau Cottage on the grounds...

You may be wrong, for all I know. But you may be right

You may be wrong, for all I know. But you may be right

David Herle, Scott Reid, Jordan Leichnitz, and Kory Teneycke provide insights on the latest in Canadian politics.

‘China Syndrome’ No More: Nuclear’s Remarkable Comeback and Canada’s Supply Chain Advantage

‘China Syndrome’ No More: Nuclear’s Remarkable Comeback and Canada’s Supply Chain Advantage

Nuclear power has gone from cursed to charmed in one of the great technological and energy comeback stories of the 21st century. Canada, particularly Ontario, is a player in two of the world’s leading ‘big nuclear’ technologies and is an early mover in small modular reactors, too. Saskatchewan has more uranium than anyone. Here’s an industry where the words Canadian...